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Benjamin Gilmer - The Other Dr. Gilmer : Two Men, a Murder, and an Unlikely Fight for Justice

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Benjamin Gilmer The Other Dr. Gilmer : Two Men, a Murder, and an Unlikely Fight for Justice
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The Other Dr Gilmer is a work of nonfiction Some names and identifying - photo 1
The Other Dr Gilmer is a work of nonfiction Some names and identifying - photo 2

The Other Dr. Gilmer is a work of nonfiction. Some names and identifying details have been changed, and some patient descriptions were written as a composite.

Copyright 2022 by Benjamin Gilmer, MD

All rights reserved.

Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

Ballantine and the House colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: Gilmer, Benjamin, author.

Title: The other Dr. Gilmer: two men, a murder, and an unlikely fight for justice / Benjamin Gilmer.

Description: First edition. | New York: Ballantine Group, [2022] | Includes bibliographical references.

Identifiers: LCCN 2021032935 (print) | LCCN 2021032936 (ebook) | ISBN 9780593355169 (hardcover) | ISBN 9780593355176 (ebook)

Subjects: LCSH: Mentally ill offendersNorth Carolina. | ClemencyNorth Carolina.

Classification: LCC HV9305.N8 G56 2022 (print) | LCC HV9305.N8 (ebook) | DDC 364.3/809756dc23

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021032935

LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021032936

Ebook ISBN9780593355176

randomhousebooks.com

Book design by Elizabeth A. D. Eno, adapted for ebook

Cover design: Rachel Ake

Cover images: Sandra Cunningham (scene), Felicia Simion/ Trevillion Images (boater), Cappy Phalen (Benjamin)

ep_prh_6.0_139326550_c0_r0

I dedicate this book to Dr. Vince Gilmer and all those suffering from mental illness behind bars. May they all be healed.

The degree of civilization in a society can be judged by entering its prisons.

Fyodor Dostoevsky

Contents
1.
GOOD HOPE ROAD

On June 28, 2004, in rural Appalachia, a man with my name and my profession strangled his father in the passenger seat of his Toyota Tacoma.

The other Dr. Gilmer was a family medicine physician in North Carolina, at a small clinic hed founded with his wife near the tiny town of Fletcher. He was recently divorced, living alone in a house on the hill above his office. In the weeks and months before that night, hed been drinking more than usual, going out to bars during the week. Hed also been making some impulsive decisionslike buying the brand-new truck he was driving, even though he was massively in debt.

After a full morning of seeing patients, Dr. Vince Gilmer left his practice on the afternoon of June 28 to drive to Broughton Hospital, a psychiatric facility in Morganton, North Carolina, where his father had lived for the previous two years. Vinces father, Dalton, was sixty years old, a diagnosed schizophrenic, and had landed at Broughton after a time of delusional behavior, drug abuse, and intermittent homelessness. Now, though, he was being released. His son was getting him out.

Dr. Vince Gilmer wasnt particularly close to his father, but he had arranged for Dalton to be cared for at a facility called Fleshers Fairview Health and Retirement Center, a five-minute drive from his house, so he could keep a closer eye on his care. Vince told his co-workers that he was going to take his father into the outdoors before taking him to his new home, that the two of them were going canoeing on Watauga Lake in Tennessee. It was a place Vince knew well. He had often escaped there to relax during his residency after medical school.

If anyone thought it was strange for Vince to drive two hours in the wrong direction so that he could take his schizophrenic father on a quick evening boat outing, they didnt mention it. This was the sort of thing he did often. Vinces nurses and co-workers would not have been surprised that he thought a trip to the lake might be therapeutic. Dr. Vince Gilmer was well known for his unconventional, friendly, and personal approach to life and medicine. He was a big believer in the power of the outdoors, the sort of doctor who had been known to take depressive patients on walks to help them clear their minds rather than just give them medicine. Patients and nurses called him Bear because of his hulking presence and warm hugs.

None of Vinces co-workers knew how much his father had deteriorated while at Broughton. If any of them had, they would have realized how difficult canoeing would have been for him. Dalton Gilmer was a frail man, heavily medicated, barely able to stand on his own. He would have needed to be lifted into the boat and certainly could not swim.

Still, along with the usual lawn care toolsgarden shears, gloves, clippersthat Vince used to maintain the landscaping at his clinic, there was a poorly tied-down canoe rattling in the bed of the truck that afternoon, throughout the hour-long drive from Cane Creek Family Health Center to Broughton.

Vince made good time. At five-thirty p.m. an orderly wheeled Dalton out in a wheelchair and loaded his meager possessions into the rear cab. He lifted Dalton into the front passenger seat after Vince moved aside a dog leash, suspending it from the headrest. Then father and son headed north, toward the North CarolinaTennessee border.

What happened next has never been fully explained. Sometime that night, they stopped at an Arbys for dinner, Daltons first meal out in over a year. Sometime that night, Dalton turned to Vince and began to hum the song Baa Baa Black Sheep. Sometime that night, Vince wrapped the dog leash around Daltons neck.

Just before midnight, Thomas Browning, coming home from a late movie in Abingdon, Virginia, an hour north of Watauga Lake, saw what he thought was a drunk man sleeping in a ditch on Good Hope Road. He and his wife pulled over and called the cops. When the police arrived, they found Dalton Gilmers body, still warm, with contusions and a bruised ring around his neck. He had soiled himself.

He was missing all of his fingers.

By the time a report was filed with the Washington County Sheriff Department, Dr. Vince Gilmer was already back in North Carolina, over a hundred miles away. Hed driven south in the predawn, on the winding two-lane country roads and slightly straighter highways that penetrate the heart of Appalachia. Hed passed through the moonlit shadows of the Blue Ridge Mountains, through fog-filled hollers and sleeping mountain communities, crossing the North Carolina state line through the Cherokee National Forest.

Ask Vince how he got home that night, and he probably wouldnt be able to tell you. The precise route is lost to time, lost to the shadows, lost to darkness. The night only comes back into focus again at three-thirty a.m. , this time bathed in fluorescent, twenty-four-hour light. Thats when a receipt from a Walmart outside of Asheville shows a ten-dollar purchase of hydrogen peroxide, paper towels, and a pair of gloves.

Vince used the hydrogen peroxide on his hands, and to wash the blood from the bed of his truck. Back at his house on Ivy Lane, he took an Ambien but couldnt sleep. The next morning, he showed up on time to clinic at Cane Creek, ready to greet his patients. The day after killing his father, Dr. Vince Gilmer worked a full day, eight in the morning to six in the evening, and no onenot his nurse, not his receptionist, not a single one of the fifteen or so patients he saw that daynoticed anything different about him.


I now work in that same clinic. I know some of the previous staff. I see Dr. Vince Gilmers patients. I use his exam rooms.

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